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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 8: the Liberator1831. (search)
l and of instruction. There is, my countrymen and friends, a remedy for such Address before Free People of Color, June, 1831, p. 15. injustice. The Constitution of the United States knows nothing of white or black men; it makes no invidious dihowever, of a just discrimination among the supporters of that Society: Of the Address before Free People of Color, June, 1831, p. 23. benevolent and disinterested intentions of many individuals, especially in the free States, we ought not to doule—the whole people. I do not despair of seeing the time when our State and Address before Free People of Color, June, 1831, p. 16. National Assemblies will contain a fair proportion of colored representatives. In fact, Mr. Garrison lived teither like me or dislike me. The immediate occasion of the Address was a visit to Philadelphia during the month of June, 1831, which gave Mr. Garrison a temporary rest from the exhausting labors of the printing-office. In that city the First An